Kuwait Times

Hackett says abusive coaches must be banned

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ADELAIDE: Australian swimming great Grant Hackett demanded yesterday that abusive coaches be banned after complaints about “misogynist­ic perverts” and as new claims of “degrading” conduct emerged. The former Olympic champion called the allegation­s shocking and said the sooner those at fault were “weeded out” the better.

“We need to be supporting young girls, we need to be supporting young boys that are in the sport and progressin­g,” Hackett, considered one

of the greatest distance swimmers ever, told Channel Nine. “And we need to make sure that none of this stuff takes place because it is extremely disappoint­ing to hear it.”

Swimming Australia has pledged to set up an independen­t female panel to investigat­e after complaints last week about “misogynist­ic perverts” by dual Olympic silver medalist Maddie Groves. The target of her comments was not clear, but Groves pulled out of the ongoing Australian Olympic swimming trials.

Former elite swimmer Jenny McMahon, a Commonweal­th Games gold medalist who is now a senior academic at the University of Tasmania, yesterday claimed the sport had long suffered from a “degrading and abusive” culture. She said she had spent 14 years interviewi­ng hundreds of swimmers and coaches, uncovering a pattern of

“toxic” coaching habits. “It’s a patriarcha­l, maledomina­ted culture, with a guru fixation - it’s dysfunctio­nal,” McMahon told The Australian newspaper. “It looks like all smiles, gold medals and PBs (personal bests) to the outsider, but it leaves a trail of broken athletes and coaches when they do not conform and perform.”

Hackett, who won the 1,500 m freestyle at both the 2000 Sydney Olympics and in Athens four years later, said it was disturbing to hear. “The people that are partaking in that sort of behavior, they need to be weeded out of the sport. We need to get rid of those people and we need to be progressin­g this sport forward,” he said. But he added that he believed it was only a “few people” and overall “you’ve got a very positive culture, you’ve got a very supportive culture”. —AFP

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